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IMDbPro

Match Game/Hollywood Squares Hour

  • TV Series
  • 1983–1984
  • TV-PG
  • 1h
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
230
YOUR RATING
Rod Arrants in Match Game/Hollywood Squares Hour (1983)
Game Show

Afternoon game show which combined elements of two classic game shows "Match Game" and "Hollywood Squares" into one.Afternoon game show which combined elements of two classic game shows "Match Game" and "Hollywood Squares" into one.Afternoon game show which combined elements of two classic game shows "Match Game" and "Hollywood Squares" into one.

  • Stars
    • Gene Rayburn
    • Jon 'Bowzer' Bauman
    • Gene Wood
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    230
    YOUR RATING
    • Stars
      • Gene Rayburn
      • Jon 'Bowzer' Bauman
      • Gene Wood
    • 15User reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Episodes191

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    Top cast99+

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    Gene Rayburn
    Gene Rayburn
    • Hollywood Squares Panelist…
    Jon 'Bowzer' Bauman
    Jon 'Bowzer' Bauman
    • Match Game Panelist…
    Gene Wood
    • Self - Announcer
    • 1983–1984
    Nedra Volz
    Nedra Volz
    • Self - Panelist
    • 1983–1984
    Leonard Frey
    Leonard Frey
    • Self - Panelist
    • 1983–1984
    Charles Nelson Reilly
    Charles Nelson Reilly
    • Self - Panelist
    • 1983–1984
    Marty Cohen
    • Self - Panelist
    • 1983–1984
    Johnny Olson
    • Self - Announcer
    • 1983–1984
    Fred Travalena
    Fred Travalena
    • Self - Panelist
    • 1983–1984
    Richard Kline
    Richard Kline
    • Self - Panelist
    • 1983–1984
    Jimmie 'JJ' Walker
    Jimmie 'JJ' Walker
    • Self - Panelist
    • 1983–1984
    Arsenio Hall
    Arsenio Hall
    • Self - Panelist
    • 1983–1984
    Tom Poston
    Tom Poston
    • Self - Panelist
    • 1983–1984
    Phyllis Diller
    Phyllis Diller
    • Self - Panelist
    • 1984
    Tom Villard
    Tom Villard
    • Self - Panelist
    • 1983–1984
    Marcia Wallace
    Marcia Wallace
    • Self - Panelist
    • 1983–1984
    Fannie Flagg
    Fannie Flagg
    • Self - Panelist
    • 1984
    Bruce Baum
    • Self - Panelist
    • 1983–1984
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews15

    6.3230
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    Featured reviews

    mattk1

    Two great games played back to back!

    It was an interesting idea to pair up Match Game with Hollywood Squares. While most of the ideas worked, some didn't. Match Game was played first. There were no regulars in this version, except Jon Bauman. Many Match Game regulars from the 70s occasionally played the game, but most of the stars were from current NBC shows. Gene was still in good form and in terms of the format, very little changed. However, without a regular panel, the show was very uneven in terms of gameplay. After Match Game, Hollywood Squares was played, with a clever transition from one show to another. 3 additional celebs were brought onstage, and the Match Game panel remained. Jon Bauman, of Sha Na Na, was an odd choice for host. Jon struggled to keep the game moving, as the stars sometimes got out of control, and he was like a substitute teacher desperately trying to get attention. Unlike Match Game, there were no regulars from the original Hollywood Squares. Overall, a good effort, but it could've been better.
    Paul-308

    Good,better than most

    I was always a fan of Match Game,and Gene Rayburn and his laughing/interactions with his regulars (Particularly Charles Nelson Reilly and Bret Somers).This show furthered that along.However,John Bauman was not my cup of tea.I never liked his large mouthed Sha Na Na bit,and his addition to this show didnt change my mind.Shame they couldnt get Peter Marshall for the job).Otherwise it was a worthy show that would be fun to watch.I even remember Gene and John commenting on the new year (1984) and they wished "many more" for the show.Alas,it wasnt to be.
    lildrchris25

    Rayburn = Good, Bauman = Bad.

    I admit, I've seen Rayburn doing the Match Game a number of times on GSN. That was a really good show, pretty funny. He continues this on the Match Game-Hollywood Squares hour.

    Bauman on the other hand. Why did NBC get this guy to do Hollywood Squares? Granted I never saw the Marshall version of Hollywood Squares (I wasn't even born before he aired) but with Marshall just coming off a huge run on it, it would seem that he would get the nod for this. The questions were more funny then the celebrities, which is one bad thing, but Bauman ran the Hollywood Squares part at a slow pace, much slower than what I would have expected.

    Super Match, no real comment on it, not a bad bonus game.

    Overall, not a bad show, but Bauman was awful.
    7bsmol

    Not as good as the 1970s Match Game or Hollywood Squares but not bad either

    I'm watching this on the Buzzr Network now and I think its pretty good I dont really find Bauman as bad as everyone says my only criticism is the classic 1970s Match Game and Hollywood Squares sets were better (I like the 1970s game show sets a lot more than any of the sets they have had since then) and the Celebrities on the 1970s shows were better, I do miss the regulars on the 1970s Match Game (Brett, Charles and Richard, and others like Fannie Flagg, Betty White,Patti, Deutsch, Jo ann Pflug, etc, etc) and Hollywood Squares (Paul Lynde, and the others), and the Sets were better in the 70s too, but I dont really find Bauman to be that bad (Peter Marshall was better but Bauman isnt that bad) and of course Gene Rayburn is the best.
    KUAlum26

    Kind of an experiment,really

    I watched this show as often as I could when it first ran on NBC,from September 1983 to July,1984(particularly after I became aware of this about halfway through the run),which wasn't too,TOO often as I was in sixth grade at the time and had few days off to catch this show at its usual two in the afternoon(CST)slotting here in the Midwest. But when I caught it,I was quite pleased with it,the mixed formats of two legendary shows and the bright,energetic theme(which has long since been co-opted by established Goodson/Todman show The Price Is Right to introduce some of their bigger games or showcases). While I will concede that bringing Peter Marshall back to cover the Hollywood Squares end of the show--to me,Jon Bauman,formerly Bowzer,wasn't bad but was perhaps a better fit as a regular panelist than host--it still seemed to have the right energy and flow(bringing back Gene Rayburn in what would be,sadly,his last affiliation with the Match Game,was among the explanations for that)to fill up an hour of time. For those not familiar,the show was broken down into two segments,where a preliminary segment of the Match game would play two rounds of celebrity matches to pick a winner to play in the second half of the show,which was the Hollywood Squares. The six-person tier set-up from the Match Game was able to meld quite nicely with the nine-person tic-tac-toe grid that was the Hollywood Squares and the winner of the Squares end of the show would play a Supermatch endgame with a chance at up to $30,000(still not a bad payoff for a single answer on any show!).

    Sadly,as this show was quietly ushered off the air(if I recall correctly,it was replaced by the soap opera "Santa Barbara",which would enjoy a near-ten year run),the demand for it on re-runs would be minimal,so I doubt its re-run(assuming it had one)on Game Show Network was probably a lasting one. About the only way to catch any of these old shows(and that probably means,at best,three or four shows)is to see them in fragments on YouTube. But who knows,there may be tapes floating out there that are yet un-seen(or,I suppose un-RE-seen)that might pop up. And maybe a re-(re?)-airing on GSN? One could hope or ask,I suppose.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      As of 2021, this is the only version of Hollywood Squares in which contestants could answer the question of a deciding square incorrectly and the opponent could win the square and the game. In all other versions, the contestant had to earn the square on their own by answering the question correctly.
    • Connections
      Followed by The New Hollywood Squares (1986)

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    FAQ13

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 31, 1983 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • The Match Game/Hollywood Squares Hour
    • Filming locations
      • Burbank, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • Mark Goodson Television Productions
      • Orion Television
      • National Broadcasting Company (NBC)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h(60 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
      • Stereo
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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